A People’s WPA

A blueprint for reimagining our society in the wake of COVID-19
co-created by community-based artists and cultural workers

A People’s WPA* is a new, beautifully illustrated publication inspired by public service job programs of the past, with an eye toward equity. The publication features the work of 25 artists and collectives transforming society today, along with 25 graphic posters, essays from the field, and a policy toolkit on how to advocate for a federally funded public works program.

*The WPA refers to the Works Progress Administration, a federal public service agency created as a part of the New Deal in 1933. Between 1933-1943, the agency sponsored public projects in the arts, employing tens of thousands of actors, musicians, writers and other artists.

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Posters

In the spirit of the original WPA, we commissioned artists to produce posters that uplift the essential forms of labor needed in this historic moment.

Check out the full collection here!

Contributing Artists: Alex Chiu, Alex Jimenez, Alvaro D Marquez, Ameya Okamoto, Brian Larney, Chip Thomas, Cindy Chischilly, Cuervo Sarabia, Jay Katelansky, Jessica Denisse Villegas, Josh Yoder, Justin Giehm, Kate Deciccio, Katie Kaplan, Lehna Huie, Lisa Solomon, Micah Bazant, Naimah Thomas, Neka King, Nicole Marroquin, Pete Railand, Peter Pa, Pippin Frisbie Calder, Sharita Towne, William Estrada

Collaborators

The following 25 creative practitioners have supported the building of A People’s WPA, a storytelling project with the goal of convincing policymakers to invest in arts, culture, and newly imagined sectors of labor critical to our healing and survival. A People’s WPA centers the transformative role played by cultural workers through a lens of 7 themes - HEALING, NOURISHMENT, REGENERATION, REMEMBERING, LIBERATION, TRUTH TELLING and DEEPENING DEMOCRACY.

Click to learn more about their practices, and scroll down to read about the work of A People’s WPA!

What is A People’s WPA

The People’s WPA poster by N’Deye Diakhate

The People’s WPA poster by N’Deye Diakhate

A People’s WPA is a cultural organizing and storytelling project that seeks to uplift essential forms of labor in an effort to build an inspiring vision of our shared future. In addition to crafting a credible vision, we seek to rally communities, educate organizers and guide decision-makers to enact ambitious policies. 

We are living in a critical moment that calls for deep government investment in forms of labor that repair the material and cultural damage wrought by unchecked industrialization, consumerism, and an extractive, colonial economic model. We recognize and are called to the work of deep healing, creative mutual aid, and radical imagination, in the service of racial, economic, and environmental justice. 

To do this work, The People’s WPA will select a group of collaborators to support in a 6 month process. Our work will be organized around the themes of HEALING, NOURISHMENT, LIBERATION, REGENERATION, REMEMBERING, TRUTH TELLING, and DEEPENING DEMOCRACY, understanding these as vital ways in which community-based artists and cultural workers are steadfastly working to repair society and move us all into a more sustainable and enriching future. 

  • HEALING - Uplifting traditional forms of healing and trauma reduction; honoring traditional medicines and ancestral wisdom; celebrating the work of doulas and midwives. 

  • NOURISHMENT - Providing food for communities via mutual aid, community gardens, seed banks and food pantries; transforming empty urban spaces into urban farms; sharing cross-culturally over food. 

  • LIBERATION - Envisioning a world without incarceration; working to tear down the walls of prisons and detention centers; demilitarizing our borders and proposing radical alternatives to current systems of injustice.

  • REGENERATION - Rejuvenating our natural systems; building true sustainability and addressing long standing inequality through climate and environmental justice. 

  • REMEMBERING - Re-telling history through popular education and printed matter including books, posters and zines; supporting our elders in transferring their vital knowledge into the community and public domain.  

  • TRUTH TELLING - Directly confronting power on the streets in order to transform society on a national level; nonviolent, creative direct action and public ritual.

  • DEEPENING DEMOCRACY- Creating new decision making structures that are more accountable to communities; advocating for participatory budgeting and civilian police review boards; increasing voter turnout and challenging voter suppression.

Commissioning support provided by The Laundromat Project.

Inspiration

A People’s WPA is inspired by and in community with the following arts-based recovery and advocacy efforts. If you know of others, please let us know!